This may seem like a silly question, but it has been driving me nuts. I am working on a network programming assignment, and one part of the code that I wrote is calling the socket recv() function with a buffer, length of the buffer, and zero specified for the flags. The recv() call returns a value of zero, and the man page says a return value of zero indicates the 'stream socket peer has performed an orderly shutdown.'
The problem is that the recv() call did actually receive data, and did update my buffer. I know because I can print it out using printf, and the data that I expected to receive during that recv() call shows up in the printf output. The problem, though is that since recv() returned zero I don't really know how much data was actually put into my buffer. I do a memset on the buffer with 0 to zero it out before I use it, so I guess I could do a strlen() call on the buffer afterward, but this seems like a hack. Is this what I'm suppose to do?
One other thing is that the socket is still open because I then loop over the socket in a while loop shortly after the first recv() call and continue receiving more data. The size of the buffer I am using is a char buffer[4096] array. Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
recv()
will return how much it read if it read something. Your code might have some other problem.recv()
returns zero, it has left exactly that much valid bytes in the buffer for you. Period.